'Fury' Film Features Last Working WWII Tiger Tank

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The upcoming World War II film "Fury" puts tank warfare front and
center in a depiction of the final Allied push into Germany in
1945.

In the movie, a U.S. Army sergeant (played by Brad Pitt) commands
a medium-size Sherman tank in battle against a Nazi force with
superior firepower,
including a well-equipped Tiger I heavy tank. The film, which
opens in theaters nationwide on Friday (Oct. 17), features the
last working Tiger tank in the world.

The
Sherman tank (officially called the Medium Tank, M4) was the
most widely deployed tank in World War II. The workhorse vehicle
was used by the U.S. Army, U.S. Marine Corps and the British,
Canadian and Free French forces, according to the Encyclopaedia
Britannica. Designed and built in the United States, a total of
49,324 Sherman tanks were made between 1942 and 1946. [ 7
Technologies That Transformed Warfare ]

The M4 was a reliable tank, but the German Tiger heavy tanks
outclassed it. The Tiger I (officially known as Panzerkampfwagen
VI Tiger Ausf. H) was deployed on all German fronts during WWII.
The formidable tank weighed 50 tons (54 metric tons) and was
heavily armored. About 1,350Tiger tanks were produced in total,
between August 1942 and August 1944.

During a scene in "Fury," four M4 tanks go head-to-head with one
Tiger I, and only one M4 survives the fight.

An M4 Sherman like the one featured in the film could penetrate
the upper frontal hull of a Tiger 1 from between about 1,600 and
3,300 feet (500 meters and 1000 m), while the Tiger could knock
out an M4 from the front at about 2,600 feet (800 m), according
to a Tiger crew instruction manual.

Both tanks used in the film — the Sherman M4E8 and the Tiger 131
— are real, and belong to the Tank Museum in
Bovington, England.

The Tiger 131 was built in Kassel, Germany, in February 1943 and
was shipped to Tunisia to join the 504th German heavy tank
battalion, according to the Tank Museum's website. On April 21,
1943, the Tiger was taken out of action by a Churchill tank of
the British 48th Royal Tank Regiment, and was captured and
repaired. On Sept. 25, 1951, the Tiger was given to the Tank
Museum.

The Tiger was "one of [the] most feared weapons unleashed by
the Nazis," capable of destroying an enemy tank from more
than 1.2 miles (2 kilometers) away, Richard Smith, the Tank
Museum's director, told the BBC.

Yet despite its ferocity, the Tiger wasn't invincible. Its tracks
would freeze up with mud and snow in the winter, which Russian
forces used to their advantage in battle. The tanks engines' were
underpowered, making them difficult to drive. The tanks also
faced problems because of their large size. Since few bridges
could handle the Tiger's weight, the first version contained a
snorkel that allowed the tanks to cross rivers up to 13 feet (4
m) deep, but later versions lacked this feature, according to the
History Learning Site.